Borderline Personality Disorder for Therapists and Counselors: When the Healer Needs Healing

How Borderline Personality Disorder affects mental health professionals — compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and self-care.

Therapists and mental health professionals are not immune to borderline personality disorder — in fact, the nature of therapeutic work creates specific vulnerabilities that require active attention.

Therapist-Specific Borderline Personality Disorder Risks

  • Vicarious traumatization: Absorbing clients' traumatic material over time affects therapists
  • Compassion fatigue: Empathy depletion from sustained therapeutic engagement
  • Counter-transference: Clients' borderline personality disorder can activate the therapist's own
  • Isolation: Session confidentiality limits peer consultation about difficult work

Signs of Borderline Personality Disorder in Mental Health Professionals

Therapist borderline personality disorder may appear as: reduced empathy for clients, dreading sessions, difficulty maintaining boundaries, intrusive material from client sessions, and overworking as avoidance.

Self-Care for Therapists with Borderline Personality Disorder

Personal therapy is recommended — not optional — for therapists experiencing borderline personality disorder. Regular supervision, peer consultation, and attention to caseload composition are professional responsibilities, not luxuries.

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free